After the dream : black and white southerners since 1965 /
Martin Luther King's 1965 address from Montgomery, Alabama, the center of much racial conflict at the time and the location of the well-publicized bus boycott a decade earlier, is often considered by historians to be the culmination of the civil rights era in American history. In his momentous...
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Médium: | Licensed eBooks |
Jazyk: | angličtina |
Vydáno: |
Lexington, Ky. :
University Press of Kentucky
©2011.
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Edice: | Civil rights and the struggle for Black equality in the twentieth century.
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On-line přístup: | https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/j.ctt2jcgd9 |
Obsah:
- Introduction
- Historic progress : public accommodations and voting rights in the Johnson years
- "Token beginnings" : the battle to desegregate southern schools and workplaces, 1965-1968
- A fragmented crusade? : the civil rights struggle in the aftermath of the King assassination, 1968-1970
- Defiance and compliance : the breakdown of freedom of choice in the south's schools
- The busing years : school desegregation in the wake of Swann
- Home has changed : southern race relations in the early 1970s
- Paving the way for full participation : civil rights in the Ford years
- Mixed outcomes : civil rights in the Carter years
- "No substantial progress" : blacks, the economy, and racial polarization in the late 1970s
- The Reagan counterrevolution
- From Bush to Bush : the complexities of civil rights
- The aftermath : from history to memory
- Poverty and progress : four decades of change
- Postscript.